Environmental Genome Initiative

Mapping the Essential Building Blocks of Human Creativity

Awarded the 2017 Innovation in Smart Chemistry sponsored by Nike, NASA, U.S. Department of State, Estee Lauder, American Chemical Society Green Chemistry Institute, and U.S. Agency for International Development.

Mission

To map the Genomic Web of Chemicals and Materials as a joint, respectful effort of product manufacturers for our global society’s needs and organizations for public health. The open-source map will yield large, unforeseen health and economic benefits as we have learned from the evolution for mapping the human genome. To also actively participate in emerging applications of the resulting informational database for a variety of joint initiatives involving other organizations.

The project leads the exploration of the environmental genome and is envisioned as a joint, respectful effort of product manufacturers for our global society’s needs, public health organizations, and the philanthropic community.

The goal is to create an open-source database and map of origin and development, in both time and place, of molecular building processes for the approximately 100,000 chemicals and materials used commercially to build every nearly product in current use by global society.

Major Benefits

Manufacturing Analysis and Improvement

Genome segments show energy and mass efficiency for every chemical manufacturing plant in a larger boundary than just one corporation and so it opens scope for more improvement

Public health information related to all the products we consume

Genome database informs improvements in social determinants of health (SDOH) with manufacturing plant data on emissions and disability-adjusted life years (DALY)

Web of chemicals and materials is the fundamental source information for public impacts of emissions to air, water, and land (known as the exposome)

Value Propositions

Public Health Improvement

Human exposome and toxicology

Social Determinants of Health

Policy implications

Manufacturing

Energy and mass efficiency

Process design and supply chains

Consumer product improvements

Chemical fingerprinting

National competitiveness and security

Environmental Impacts

Carbon footprints

GIS overlays

Climate change implications

Enabling of new research

Systems chemistry and Earth System Science

Product life cycle technologies

Vision

Over a six year period, the current vision is a six component large scale initiative.

Build on a well-developed system, tested already on 1,500 chemicals in commerce to establish a high efficiency routing system to map the full Web of 100,000 chemicals in commerce (which account for 95+ percent of all global non-agricultural products).

Drive down the time and cost to map each segment of the genome by better data mining, physical properties techniques, and genome structure mapping.

Move through four funding stages over a fully active six year span, to lead the nonprofit organization and the open source database, but supporting for-profit analytics to use this large new innovative information field.

Identify and initiate teams (of approximately 25 genome developers and two manager/review specialists) in multiple U.S. locations and international countries.

Educate and encourage, from the start, broad support and collaboration from the chemical/materials manufacturing sector and the public health sector (in the exposome and elsewhere) through presentations and other visibility mechanisms.

Develop flexible specialist teams to guide the mapping process for greater efficiency, to verify waste management effects, to increase the capacity of the mapping tools and database, and to fund research and development projects that utilize genome information with outside groups.

It is anticipated that the new knowledge generated in this Web will guide improvements to this vision and will foster diverse for-profit organizations that build analytics from the genome development.

More information – presentations, articles, and examples

This is a recent Power Point presentation given to describe the evolution and content of the Environmental Genome Initiative. Similar presentations are underway to groups with direct interest in the mapping of the Environmental Genome.

The discovery of the environmental genome for industrial products was published by the Royal Society of Chemistry in the Journal of Green Chemistry. The full paper includes the origin of the repeatable structure of the environmental genomic segments and the implications for mapping the full genome.